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A BOOK OF 
DORCAS DISHES 

FAMILY RECIPES 

Contributed by the Dorcas Society 
of Mollis and Buxton 

EDITED BY 

KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN 

n 



' This woman . . . called Dorcas . . . 
was full of good works and 
alms deeds which < she did." 




PRIVATELY PRINTED 
1911 






COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY KATE DOUGLAS RIGGS 
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 



^ 






A 



^: 



CONTENTS 

I. Breads of Various Kinds ... 13 

II. Meat Dishes 22 

III. Fish 28 

IV. Vegetables 34 

V. Salads and Dressings . . . .39 

VI. Pies 45 

VII. Puddings 49 

VIII. Company Desserts .... 55 

IX. Cake 60 

X. Doughnuts and Cookies ... 73 

XI. Pickles, etc. 79 

XII. Miscellaneous 83 

XIII. Country Table Decoration . . .91 



THE PRAISE AND PROPERTIES 
OF A GOOD WIFE 



"She is like the merchants' ships; she bringeth her 
food from afar." 

"She riseth also while it is yet night, and giveth meat 
to her household.'' 

"She considereth a field, and buyeth it: with the fruit 
of her hands she planteth a vineyard." 

"She stretcheth out her hand to the poor; yea, she 
reacheth forth her hands to the needy." 

"She looketh well to the ways of her household, and 
eateth not the bread of idleness." 

"Her children arise up, and call her blessed; her hus- 
band also, and he praiseth her." 

"Many daughters have done virtuously, but thou 
excellest them all." 

PrOVEKBS XXXI* 



INTRODUCTION 

DO not suppose we ^^ Dorcases '' fancy that 
the world is waiting for another cookery 
book, nor that we believe we are supplying a 
long-felt want with this little pamphlet. One 
could have no illusions on that subject when the 
monthly and weekly magazines, and even the 
daily papers, have pages in every issue devoted 
to recipes, together with columns upon columns 
of suggestive bills of fare. Everybody reads 
these regularly, remarking to the person sitting 
near: *^ That sounds good! '' ^* I must paste 
that in my book.'* ^^ Let's try that some time.'' 
My private opinion is that we need cooks much 
more than books, and that one housekeeper who 
will experiment on appetizing novelties is worth 
a dozen of those who buy books, cut out, pin up, 
paste in, and hoard recipes, but continue to 
serve their families with the same dishes they 
used when they began housekeeping. 

This modest volume does not aim to be a com- 
plete compendium of scientific cookery nor 
a practical guide to the young housekeeper; 
neither can we claim for it any startling origi- 
nality. It has been compiled because we have 
many enterprises in hand for which we need 
money, and we believe the book may be one of 
the ways in which we can fill our treasury. But 
although we disclaim all intention of surprising 

5 



and instructing the culinary world, and avow 
our hope of financial profit, we take honest 
pride in our little book, as we do in all our en- 
deavors, large or small. Every dish in it has 
been made hundreds of times by the particular 
Dorcas whose name is attached to it; but I 
sometimes think Dorcas should accompany her 
own recipe and stand over it until it is cooked 
and eaten, for the cake labelled '^ Delicious '^ 
sometimes turns out a sorry failure in your 
opposite neighbor's kitchen. There is a hard 
hand and a light one in cooking as well as on 
a horse's rein, and it almost seems as if butter 
and eggs knew their mistress and instinctively 
obeyed her orders, feeling themselves in the 
grasp of a superior power. 

^* Oven-judgment '' never comes to some 
women in the course of their lives (and we cer- 
tainly hope that they will feel no need of it in 
another world!) nor does the faculty of deftly 
combining the necessary ingredients. The terms 
'* stiff,'' **thin," ^Miard," *^ soft " are very 
flexible and depend on the cook's point of view, 
while the art of perfect seasoning and flavor- 
ing is all too seldom attained. 

Women are largely in the majority in New 
England, and because that is so it follows 
necessarily and naturally that they should take 
a considerable share of civic as well as do- 
mestic responsibility. 

In church, school, garden, and farm work 
we women are as much needed as in the home, 
and we shall never be able to make our vil- 

6 



lages pleasant and prosperous places to live in, 
nor provide the proper environment for the 
younger generation unless we apply ourselves 
earnestly and intelligently to the task. 

The cooking in small hotels and boarding 
houses along our countryside does not com- 
pare with that in England or on the Continent, 
and we are constantly criticised for the small 
amount of nourishment and large amount of 
dyspepsia with which we furnish our farming 
and laboring classes. 

The devising of a good liberal diet, simple 
but varied, is one of the most important ends 
to which the mistress of a household can de- 
vote her energies. Is Dorcas doing all she might 
in this matter? How can we inspire and help 
our brothers, husbands, fathers to bring back 
the old garden to its once noble estate 1 Where 
are the rows of currant and raspberry bushes 
we used to see at the side or back of the house 1 
We need not raise small fruits for the market 
if we lack time or strength, land or labor, but 
how about raising things for the family and 
the growing children? 

When I was a girl there were always a few 
black and red currant bushes in the garden, 
with blackberries, raspberries, or strawberries. 
There was a single pear, or crab apple, quince, 
or plum tree in the orchard, and a Concord 
grape-vine over a porch. Citron melons were 
grown then, and there was a barberry bush 
planted by the kitchen door; and what deli- 
cious preserves for the long winter came from 

7 



those quince and apple trees, those citrons and 
damsons and pomegranates! Green and ripe 
tomatoes helped to swell the list, and mother 
had only to bny lemons and sugar and ginger 
to fill the goody-cupboard to bursting. Home- 
made jellies and jams mean a few days in a hot 
kitchen, but what comparison is there between 
these, with their pure, wholesome fruit juices, 
and the gelatine-laden products of the shops? 

How shall we make the table more attractive, 
the food at once more appetizing and nourish- 
ing? How, especially, can it be done when the 
mistress of the house is a mother of children, 
having, with a little help, or with none at all, to 
take care of washing, ironing, sewing, mending, 
as well as cooking? Only a woman of good 
health, rare common sense, great patience, and 
fine spirit can compass this daily round of 
duties successfully; but it is a very beautiful, 
even a splendid thing when it is compassed! 

A palatable meal, a well-set table, a family 
with keen and appreciative appetite, good diges- 
tion, hearty, healthy children with pleasant 
table manners, and a general feeling that 
mother is the very best cook in the universe! 
These read like humble things, but their sum 
total is probably one of the greatest factors in 
useful and happy living. 

Any one who has a general helper or a servant 
can easily manage spotless table linen, changes 
of plates, service in courses, flowers, and all the 
accessories that go to make up a dainty meal; 
but how shall the tired woman who has been on 

8 



her feet all day keep strength and ambition 
enough to preserve the niceties of life when she 
is completely worn ont with its necessities? It 
cannot always be done, — that might as well be 
confessed at the outset. There are days of con- 
stant interruption, of illness, of discourage- 
ment, of exhaustion, when things are dropped 
wearily on the table, and the children are al- 
lowed to eat in confusion and hurry and dis- 
order. But this is only occasional, and any 
woman who loves and seeks after beauty — 
beauty of cleanliness, freshness, order, refine- 
ment, harmony, punctuality — will manage to 
attain it at least a fair portion of the time. 
Every home in which this sort of modest unos- 
tentatious beauty is present is a lighthouse to 
the surrounding country. Every housekeeper 
who can be clean without being ^* p'ison neat," 
energetic without being a '^ bustler,'' a good 
cook without being too extravagant, hospitable, 
yet keeping strength for her own family, — such 
a woman is as much an inspiration to the com- 
munity as she is to her own household. 

Our Dorcas Society has held many unspoken 
ideals these last busy years. It has not only 
held them but it has worked for them. We want 
our little group of villages on the brink of the 
river to hold up their heads and wax strong. 
We want our district schools to improve from 
year to year; our buildings to renew their 
paint and shingles; our farms to thrive; our 
Village Improvement societies to prosper; our 
churches to grow; our roads to be bettered; 

9 



our new Library to be an influence in its 
modest way. 

We are helping to build a new Parish or 
Community House where boys' and girls' clubs 
can meet; where gatherings of many sorts can 
be held, and such lectures and entertainments 
as are appropriate to a small audience room; 
where also the social hospitalities of the church 
can be dispensed with comfort and dignity. 

Many of our young people will go away in 
search of larger opportunities and gains, but 
we shall always have them during the forma- 
tive years of life, and we want to send them out 
into the world so equipped that they will be a 
credit to the place of their birth. 

This Dorcas Fair of August, 1911, is one of 
our annual attempts to earn money for worthy 
causes. The Book of Dorcas Dishes will be 
a souvenir of our hopes, our ambitions, our 
courage, and our faith. It will voice our belief 
in the value of good housekeeping and good 
cookery, which indeed are real civic virtues. 

When you try one of our simple recipes 
remember that you have added your mite to a 
fund that will be used for all sorts of fine pur- 
poses, broad and unsectarian ones. 

We have purposely included very simple 
dishes; just the plain, daily diet of a band of 
country Dorcases, with a few pretty things we 
cook when an old friend graces the supper 
table, or company comes from Boston, or John 
brings home his bride. Let us sum it all up. 
Good cooking needs skill, judgment, and imag- 

10 



ination, therefore it tests the qualities of the 
cleverest woman. Nobody pretends that dish- 
washing is attractive, and nothing but Chris- 
tian grace makes us endure the pots and pans, 
but cookery is high art; let us think of it as 
such, and we shall be properly proud of such 
triumphs as we achieve. Who would not 
rather make a delicious strawberry short-cake 
than play The Maiden's Prayer on the piano? 
Where is the painted table-scarf that can com- 
pare with an honest loaf of milk-white bread? 
Is a bunch of wax or paper flowers any more 
artistic than a ball of perfect butter stamped 
with a garland of daisies? No; there is genius 
in a wonderfully seasoned dish of meat or 
fish, in a toothsome sauce, or in a clever ar- 
rangement of ^' left overs." There is real 
poetry in a shining country kitchen; poetry in 
bread and cake as light as a feather. Would 
that a little of it, felt by some Dorcas as she 
stirred and kneaded and measured, — would 
that a little of it might be imprisoned in this 
text, and find its way into another woman's 
heart in some other country kitchen. 

Kate Douglas Wiggin. 

Quillcote, August f 1911. 



11 



BREADS OF VARIOUS SORTS 

Raised Bread 

To be made in the morning. 

(Mrs. Perley A. Berry) 

2 cakes compressed yeast. 
1 pt. sweet milk. 

1 qt. warm water. 

2 tablespoons sugar. 
1 tablespoon salt. 

Piece of lard size of a large egg. 

DIRECTIONS FOR MAKIlsTG 

Put yeast in 1 pt. warm water early in the 
morning. 

Let stand % hour in a warm place ; stir into 
this mixture II/2 pts. flour; let stand about % 
of an hour or until full of bubbles. 

Add to the above, 1 pt. warm water, 1 pt. 
scalded milk, sugar and salt. 

Beat together, stir in all the '^ raise-bread 
flour ' ' it will take ; turn out on bread board and 
cut and knead, working in the lard until smooth. 
Let rise until light or about 6 hours, mould- 
ing in loaves with the hands, not kneading on 
board. Set to rise. When tin is % full brush 
over with melted lard; set in a hot oven, with 

13 



door open for 10 minutes ; close door and bake 
% of an hour; take out and brush over with 
melted butter, break apart and cool. 

Sour Milk Brown Bread 

(Mrs. Guy L. Hall) 

1 cup cornmeal. 

1 cup rye flour. 

1 cup graham flour. 

1 cup of raisins. 

1 teaspoon salt. 

1 heaping teaspoon soda. 

% cup molasses. 

1 pt. sour milk. 

Mix in order given. Steam 3 hours, then 
remove cover from mould and put in oven to 
form crust. 

Parsonage Oatmeal Bread 

(Mrs. Robert ^. Earhutt) 

1 qt. of boiling water turned on 1 pt. of 
rolled oats. Let stand until cool. Then add % 
yeast cake dissolved in a little water, % cup of 
molasses, 1 qt. entire wheat flour, 1 qt. sifted 
flour, and salt to taste. 

Eise over night, stir down, rise again, stir 
down, drop in bread tins, rise again, and bake 
about 40 minutes. 

Bishop's Bread 

(Mrs. E. A. Owen) 

3 eggs. 

1 cup sugar. 

14 



1 cup raisins. 

1 cup split, unblanched almonds. 

2 cups flour. 

1 teaspoon soda. 

2 teaspoons cream tartar. 

Pinch of salt, and flavor with lemon or vanilla. 

Beat the eggs and sugar until very light. 
Then add flour and raising, and lastly the nuts 
and raisins. Spread in thin sheet on buttered 
tin, and cut in small oblongs or squares before 
it is cold. 

Walnut Brown Bread 

(Mrs. Margaret Lord) 

2 cups graham flour. 

1% cups white flour. 

% cup brown sugar. 

% cup molasses. 

2 cups sweet milk. 

1 teaspoon salt. 

1 large teaspoon soda. 

1 cup chopped walnuts, fine. 

Beat light. Bake in one loaf 1 hour. 

Blueberry Bread 

(Mrs. Charles Nichols) 

1 qt. flour sifted with 1 heaping teaspoonful 
soda. 

Yo cup sugar and a little salt. 

1 qt. berries mixed dry with flour. 

% cup sour cream and enough sour milk to 
make rather a soft dough. Bake % hour in 
moderately hot oven. 

15 



Bran Meal Gems 

(Mrs. E. F. Smith) 

1 cup Educator Bran Meal. 
% cup milk. 

14 teaspoon salt. 

2 tablespoons sugar. 
1 egg. 

1 teaspoon baking powder. 
Have gem pans very hot, and bake in very 
hot oven. 

Brown Bread Brewis 

(Mrs. Willis Oraffam) 

Bits of crusts and bits of brown bread, nicely 
broken and browned in oven. A rich milk and 
butter sauce, as for milk-dipped toast. Put the 
hot bread pieces into the dip while it is still 
boiling. Stir and simmer a good while. 

Twin Elms Tea-Cake 

(Mrs. Jane C. AkersJ 

1 egg well beaten. 

Piece of butter size of an egg. 

14 cup sugar. 

1 cup sweet milk. 
Salt. 

2 cups flour, or if baking powder is used, 3 
even teaspoons. 



16 



Graham Bread 

(Mrs. Alice Bickford) 

1% cups Quaker Oats. 

% cup sugar. 

1 tablespoon lard. 

1 tablespoon salt. 

3 cups boiling water. 

% cake compressed yeast. 

3 cups graham flour. 

3 cups white flour. 

Put Quaker Oats, sugar, salt, and lard in 
bread bowl; add boiling water. When luke- 
warm add yeast dissolved in a little water. 
Graham flour (unsifted) and white flour 
(sifted). 

Stir very hard for five minutes and let stand 
over night. 

In the morning stir down and put into pans 
(three small ones). Let rise for an hour or two, 
and then bake 1 hour. Do not knead or touch 
with the hands. 

Quaker Oats Bread 

(Mrs. A. L. T. Cummings) 

, 2 cups Quaker Oats. 
% cup sugar. 
% cup molasses. 
1 tablespoon even full lard. 
1 teaspoon salt. 

4 cups boiling water. 
Cool. 

1 yeast cake in 1 cup of water. 

2 qts. flour. 

17 



Tea Rolls 

CMrs. John Fogg) 

1 pt. flour. 

% teaspoon soda. 

1 teaspoon cream tartar. 

% teaspoon salt. 

Sift all together and mix with sweet milk. 
Koll about half an inch thick. Spread with 
butter and sprinkle with sugar, and roll as for 
jelly cake. Cut in small rolls and bake in a 
moderate oven. 

The Deacon's Blueberry Cake 

{Mrs. E. B. Hanson) 

1 Qgg whipped light. 
1 cup sweet milk. 
3 tablespoons sugar. 
Butter size of an egg, 

1 teaspoon soda. 

2 teaspoons cream tartar sifted in 3 cups flour. 
2 cups berries. 

To be eaten hot with butter. 

Blueberry Muffins 

(Mrs. L. A. Berry) 

1 ^gg- 

% cup sugar. 

2 tablespoons butter. 

1 cup sweet milk. 

2 even cups flour. 
% teaspoon soda. 

1 teaspoon cream tartar. 

2 cups blueberries. 

18 



Muffins 

(Eliisa 8. Lilly) 

1 pt. sour cream. 

2 eggs. 

1 teaspoon soda. 
A little salt. 

Add flour to make a batter, and drop in hot 
tins. 

Johnny Cake 

(Mrs. Frank L. Tarlox) 

1 cup meal. 
1/2 cup flour. 

1 teaspoon soda. 
Salt. 

2 tablespoons molasses. 
1 tablespoon sugar. 
Sour milk to mix. 

My Mother's Tea Biscuits 

(Mrs. Andretu L. Berry) 

Have all the ingredients close at hand, and 
see that the oven is hot. After beginning work 
very quickly. 

To 1 qt. of flour add 2 teaspoons of cream 
of tartar, a teaspoon of sugar, and a pinch of 
salt. While sifting these together, have dis- 
solving in a cup 1 teaspoon soda and amount 
of shortening desired by pouring a small quan- 
tity of hot water upon them. When dissolved 
fill the cup up with sweet milk and mix with the 
flour, adding enough more milk to make a soft 
dough. 

As soon as the flour is nearly under control 
19 



remove spoon and finish with a knife, cutting 
rapidly. Mould and cut into small biscuits and 
rush into the oven. 

Graham Bread 

(Mrs. Emery Earriman) 

1% pts. sour milk. 

% coffee cup molasses. 

% teaspoon salt. 

2 teaspoons soda in a little hot water. 

Add as much Graham flour as can be stirred 
in with a spoon. Pour into a well-greased pan 
and bake 2 hours. 

Entire Wheat Muffins 

(Mrs. Leonard Towle) 

2 cups entire wheat flour. 
1 teaspoon soda. 

1 teaspoon salt, 

2 teaspoons cream tartar. 
% cup sugar or molasses. 

1 egg beaten until light and added to 
1 cup milk. 

1 tablespoon melted butter. 
Mix in order given and bake 20 minutes in hot 
oven. 



Pop-Overs 

(Ella Deering) 



3 cups flour. 
3 cups milk. 
3 eggs. 
1 teaspoon salt. 



20 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



Mix part of milk with flour until a smooth 
paste is formed, then add the remainder of the 
milk with the beaten eggs. Mix thoroughly and 
bake in gem pans in a quick oven % hour, or 
until the puffs are brown and well popped over. 

Indian Meal Griddle Cakes 

(Mrs. Frederick Dyer) 

1 pint sour milk. 

1 ^gg- 

1 teaspoon salt. 

1/2 teaspoon soda. 

1 tablespoon soda. 

1 tablespoon molasses. 

% tablespoon melted lard. 

1/4 cup of flour. 

Meal enough to make a good frying batter. 

Warmed-Over Biscuits 

(Mrs. Samuel Knox) 

Wrap in a cloth and put in a steamer for 10 
or 15 minutes, then place in oven in a well- 
buttered pan, first buttering the top crusts. 
Keep them in oven till crisp. 



21 



II 

MEAT DISHES 

Veal Loaf 

(Mrs. H. E. Bradbury) 

3 lbs. upper part of leg of veal, chopped fine. 

% lb. of well-selected salt pork, chopped fine. 

2 eggs, well beaten. 

1 cnp powdered crackers. 

1 teaspoonful salt. 

1 teaspoonful pepper. 

1 teaspoonful sage. 

All to be mixed up thoroughly and baked in 
a bread pan for 1 hour and 10 or 15 minutes. 

Hamburger Roast 

(Mrs. Ira Libhy) 

2 lbs. of the bottom of round steak, put 
through meat chopper. 

% cup milk. 

2 well-beaten eggs. 

Good % cup rolled cracker crumbs. 

% cup melted butter or bacon fat. 

Salt, pepper, and poultry dressing to taste and 

1 onion, if desired. 

Mix well and shape, then dredge well with 
flour. Put small pieces of butter on top and 
bake in good oven 1 hour. Baste well with but- 
ter or bacon fat. Make gravy. 

22 



Pot Roast 

(Mrs. John Guilford) 

Melt in a hot frying pan a lump of butter; or 
fry out a small piece of pork; while very hot put 
in the roast, browning all sides. Eoll it over; 
do not insert fork, so as to keep all juices in. 
When browned, put in a pot which has been 
heated; put water in the frying pan to get any 
juices that have escaped, and pour over meat. 
Cover closely and cook slowly 3 hours, turning 
occasionally. Keep about a cup of water under 
the meat and sprinkle a little flour and salt over 
the meat 15 minutes before taking out, and turn 
several times. Browned potatoes are very nice 
with this meat : Boil potatoes whole until nearly 
done; drain, roll in flour, take meat out and put 
in potatoes in the gravy in the pot, until browned 
somewhat. Take the potatoes out and place in 
a hot oven while thickening the gravy and they 
will crisp over and are very nice. 

Dorcas Hash 

(Mrs. James Woodman) 

Cut cold cooked beef or mutton into small bits, 
re-heat in gravy or in a sauce made of butter, 
flour, and water in which a little beef extract 
has been dissolved. Season with salt, pepper, 
and grated onion, if you choose. Fill a buttered 
baking-dish two-thirds full. Cover the top with 
seasoned mashed potato made very light with 
the white of an egg beaten to a stiff froth. Bake 
in a hot oven until the potato is well puffed and 
brown. 

23 



Baked Sausages 

(Mrs. Samuel Chase) 

Prick the sausages with a fork and bake for 
6 or 7 minutes in a hot oven; take 3 cups of 
mashed potatoes and whip it with a well-beaten 
egg; lay this on a baking dish with the sausages 
on top, and cook 6 minutes longer. 

Chicken a la Dorcas 

(Mrs. Margaret Lord) 

Cut up a tender chicken. Season with salt and 
pepper, dip in egg and crumbs, and arrange the 
pieces close together in a buttered baking-pan. 
Dot each piece with butter, cover with another 
dripping-pan, and bake in a hot oven until 
brown. Make a cream sauce and scrape the 
crumbs, butter, and bits of chicken which will 
stick to the baking-pan into the sauce. Pour 
the sauce over the chicken. 

Potted Chicken 

(Mrs. Norton Libhy) 

Cut up a chicken as for fricassee and to each 
pound of meat allow 2 tablespoonfuls of flour, 
% teaspoonful salt (very scant), and a dust of 
pepper. Mix thoroughly and roll each piece of 
the meat in the mixture. Pack closely in a large 
bean pot and cover with boiling water and bake 
3% hours. Cover after 10 or 15 minutes, but not 
before it boils. 

Beef and Tomato Stew 

(Mrs. Giheon Bradbury) 

1 cupful lean, uncooked beef, chopped fine. 
1% cupfuls strained tomato juice. 
24 



4 to 6 slices dried toast. 

1% tablespoonfuls butter. 

11/2 tablespoonfuls flour. 

1 tablespoonful finely chopped onion. 

1 teaspoonful salt. 

14 teaspoonful pepper. 

Melt the butter, add the onion and cook until 
slightly colored; put in the meat, packing it 
down solidly. Cook, without stirring, until it be- 
gins to brown around the edge, then turn (it will 
break, but this does not matter) and cook until 
almost dry. Put the tomato juice, salt, and pep- 
per into an agate w^are sauce pan, and bring to 
boiling point. Mix the flour well with the meat, 
turn into the tomato juice, stirring until it boils 
and thickens. Pour out on the toast and serve 
hot. 

Second-Day Roast Beef 

(Evelyn Button Fogg) 

Cut the lean meat of the cold roast beef into 
small squares, removing any fat or tough parts. 
Take a quart, or a pint of stewed tomatoes, ac- 
cording to the quantity of meat. Boil i/4 pound 
of macaroni in water until tender, then drain. 
Add left-over gravy to the tomatoes. Put into 
a baking dish alternate layers of macaroni and 
meat, pour in the tomatoes and gravy, cover the 
top with fine bread crumbs and bake in the oven 
until the crumbs are well browned. The propor- 
tions depend upon the amount of meat, and 
additional gravy may be had by boiling the 
scraps in a little water, seasoning and adding 
to the tomatoes. 

25 



Rolled Beefsteak 

(Mrs. John Guilford) 

Take a round steak, beat it well and spread it 
with a dressing such as is used for poultry. Be- 
gin at one end and roll it up neatly, trying to 
keep it in shape. Put it in a bake-pan with a 
little water, and bake until the meat is tender, 
basting it frequently, and when nearly done put 
a tablespoonful of butter over it. Thicken the 
gravy in the pan with a little flour and season 
well. Cut the meat as you would a berry-roll, 
slicing off the ends neatly. 

Chicken a la Maryland 

(Mrs. Austin G. Gorham) 

Cut your chicken as for frying. Wash, and 
dry in a cloth ; then dip chicken in either melted 
butter or fat from fried pork. Salt and pepper 
the pieces, then roll them in cracker or bread 
crumbs; put in baking pan, in two layers, baste 
with melted butter and part water (or baste with 
pork fat, if used). Bake till thoroughly done, 
then place chicken on hot platter and cover all 
with thickened gravy, unstrained. 

Dumplings 

(Henrietta Elden) 

For every cup of flour use 1 heaping teaspoon- 
ful baking powder, 1 small teaspoonful salt. Use 
milk to stir as stiff as possible with a strong 
spoon, leaving a little dust of flour that is not 
mixed in. Dip the spoon in the stew, then in 
dough, cutting off small pieces not larger than a 

26 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



hen's egg, as they expand to twice their size. 
Lay around on top of stew, then draw the pan 
they are cooking in back on top of stove, so they 
will not burn, keeping just boiling slowly. Leave 
the cover oif until the dumplings are like puff 
balls, then put the cover over them until they 
are cooked, which will be about 20 minutes. 

Mexican Stew 

(Mrs. Austin G. Gorham) 

1 slice round steak (about 1% lbs.). 

6 beets. 

6 turnips. 

6 onions. 

6 potatoes. 

6 peppers (large, sweet, green). 

6 tomatoes. 

Put steak in bottom of pot, then add the beets 
and turnips, and cover all with boiling water, 
and add water as it cooks away. After these 
have cooked 3 hours, add the potatoes, onions, 
and peppers (removing part of the seeds from 
the peppers, or it will be too hot), and cook 1 
hour. Then add the tomatoes and cook 20 min- 
utes. Thicken with flour (mixed with a little 
cold water), season to taste. ' Cook slowly all 
through on top of stove. 



27 



Ill 

FISH DISHES 

Quillcote Codfish Pie 

(Nora A. Smith) 

Line a dish with 2 crusts of puff paste and 
bake. Eemove upper crust and fill with codfish 
prepared as follows : Flake and freshen 1 strip 
of codfish and cut an onion in bits, cooking in 
water until done. Let 1 cup of creamy milk 
come to a boil, thicken with flour, add fish and 
onion and small piece of butter. Serve hot. 

Creamed Fish on Toast 

(Mrs. William Deering) 

Haddock or any white fish, cold water to 
cover. 
1 pt. milk. 

1 tablespoon butter. 

2 heaping tablespoons flour. 
i/o teaspoon salt. 

Pinch of pepper. 

1 tablespoon chopped parsley. 

Wash the fish well. With a very sharp knife 
cut off the best of the flesh, commencing along 
the line of the back where the dorsal fins have 
been removed and cutting both ways. This 
may be saved for frying. Boil the remaining 
fish and bones, in cold water enough to cover, 

28 



until done. Eemove bones and skin. Add milk, 
let come to a boil and then add the flour moist- 
ened with a little cold water. When thickened, 
season with salt, pepper, butter, and parsley, 
and serve on toast. 

Baked Halibut 

(Sarah D. Moulton) 

Take 2 slices of halibut 1 inch thick ; between 
them put cracker crumbs, pepper, salt, and fat 
pork chopped fine; put the same on top, using 
butter instead of pork. Bake in a small pan set 
into a larger pan of water. Bake till the 
crumbs are brown, basting frequently with the 
drippings. 

Clam Chowder 

(Mrs. Thomas L. Kimball) 

1 qt. clams. Separate the belly from the other 
part, and cut off the black heads. Have ready 
some fried pork scraps, some split crackers, 
sliced raw potatoes, and onions. Put a layer of 
clams, a layer of crackers, a layer of potatoes, 
and onions, with pepper and salt on each layer. 
Cover with hot water and boil until potatoes 
are done. Then add two quarts of milk. 

Salmon Souffle 

(Mrs. Emery Harriman) 

2 level tablespoons butter. 
2 level tablespoons flour. 

1 teaspoon salt. 

l^ teaspoon paprika. 

1 pt. milk. 

29 



1 cup stale bread crumbs. 
1 teaspoon onion juice. 
1 teaspoon chopped parsley. 
1 teaspoon lemon juice. 
1 pound cooked salmon. 

3 eggs. 

Prepare a sauce with the butter, flour, sea- 
soning, and milk; add bread crumbs, yolks of 
eggs well beaten, onion juice, lemon juice, pars- 
ley, and salmon rubbed fine with a silver fork. 
Then fold in whites of eggs beaten dry. Turn 
mixture into buttered baking dish and set this 
into a dish of hot water. Bake about 25 min- 
utes in a moderate oven. 

Salmon Loaf 

(Mrs. A. G. Wiley) 

1 can salmon picked up fine with fork. 

4 eggs. 

4 tablespoons butter. 
% cup bread crumbs. 
Salt and pepper to taste. 
Steam 1 hour in quart bowl. Serve with 
sauce. 

Escalloped Oysters 

(Mrs. W. 8. Moulton) 

1 pt. oysters. 
8 common crackers. 
1/2 cup water. 
1 cup milk. 

Piece of butter size of an egg. 
Pepper and salt. 

Butter a baking dish; sprinkle the bottom 
30 



with cracker crumbs, then have a layer of 
oysters, then cracker crumbs. Moisten with 
milk, butter, proceed till dish is full, having 
cracker crumbs on top. Bake in a hot oven 
30 minutes. 

Codfish Balls 

(Mrs. Oland Trask) 

To 1 cup of boiled codfish chopped fine add 
2 cups or more of mashed potatoes. Moisten 
with 1 beaten Qgg, or 2 or 3 tablespoons of sweet 
milk. Season with pepper and a little butter. 

Make small flat cakes, flour, and fry a delicate 
brown in hot dripping or lard. A more deli- 
cate dish is made by dipping the cakes in 
beaten Qgg, then in bread crumbs and fry as 
above stated. 

Salmon Pie 

(M7's. Perley A. Berry) 

2 small cans salmon. 

4 eggs. 

1 cup macaroni. 

Open salmon, pick out bones and skin; cook 
macaroni in boiling salted water I/2 hour; boil 
eggs until hard, peel and cut in halves. Line a 
3-qt. baking pan with puff paste. 

Wet edges of pan after being lined, then put 
in the salmon, eggs, and macaroni in order 
named. 

Lay in 3 crackers split. 

Pepper and salt, a little onion if liked, i/4 
lb. butter, or a butter gravy poured over the 
whole, and fill % full. Cover with crust rolled 
out % in. thick. 

31 



Codfish Foam 

(Mrs. Chas. Earle) 

Make a white sauce of 1 tablespoon of flour, 
1 teaspoon of butter, and 1 cup of hot milk. Stir 
until smooth, then add 2 tablespoons of finely 
picked codfish, freshened, and the beaten whites 

of 2 eggs. 

Fish Croquettes 

(Mrs. Guy L. Hall) 

Chop finely cold cooked fish. To each cupful 
add 1 large cracker rolled to a powder, 1 well 
beaten egg, 1 tablespoon of milk, and pepper 
and salt to taste. Fry in butter until nicely 
browned on both sides and allow 1 small table- 
spoon for each croquette. 

Baked Stuffed Haddock 

(Mrs. John Guilford) 

One medium-sized fresh haddock. 
2 tablespoons of bread crumbs. 
2 tablespoons of suet. 
2 tablespoons of parsley. 

1 teaspoon of herbs, 
legg. 

A little milk, salt, and pepper. 
Browned crumbs. 

2 ounces of dripping. . 

Wash and trim the fish; that is, neatly cut 
off the fins, point the tail and remove the eyes. 
Next make the stuffing by chopping the suet, 
parsley, and herbs, and mix them with the 
crumbs. Season well, and add enough milk to 

32 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



keep tlie mixture from crumbling. Press tHs 
into the inside of the fish, into the space just 
under the head where it is not open. Skewer or 
sew the edges together to keep in the stuffing 
and truss the fish in a circle by pushing the tail 
through the eyes. Next rub the fish all over 
with flour to dry it. Beat up the egg and paint 
the fish all over with it, then entirely cover with 
some nicely browned crumbs, so that it looks 
like a fried haddock. 

Put the fish in a baking tin with the dripping. 
Bake in a moderate oven about 10 to 15 minutes. 
Baste it frequently, lift out of tin and remove 
skewer or stick. Serve on a hot dish with 
anchovy or butter sauce round. 



33 



IV 
VEGETABLES 

Macaroni with Cheese 

(Mrs. Giheon Bradbury) 

Take % of a pound of macaroni, break in 
small pieces, and boil in 3 pts. of salted water 
20 minntes; turn into a collander, pour cold 
water over it and drain. Make a sauce of 1 
tablespoon each of flour and butter, and 1% cups 
of hot milk ; salt. Put a layer of grated cheese 
in a dish, then a layer of macaroni, then sauce, 
then another layer of cheese, macaroni, and 
sauce, covering with fine bread crumbs, dotted 
with small pieces of butter. Bake until brown. 

Browned Tomatoes 

(Mrs. Ira Lihhy) 

Wipe tomatoes and cut in halves, or if large 
into thirds. Lay cut side up in baking pan, and 
sprinkle with salt. Cover vdth green peppers 
and onions chopped fine. Moisten some soft 
bread crumbs with melted butter and put gen- 
erous layer over whole. Place the pan in hot 
oven and let cook until crumbs are well browned. 

Candied Sweet Potatoes 

(Mrs. C. F. Howe) 

Boil the potatoes until they are thoroughly 
cooked, then peel and slice them. Butter a shal- 

34 



low dish or tin and put in a layer of potatoes. 
Sprinkle over this a little sugar, then put in 
another layer of potatoes and another of sugar, 
with a few bits of butter on top. A little maple 
syrup added before putting into the oven makes 
it still better. Leave in the oven only long 
enough to brown. 

Stuffed Spanish Onions 

(Mrs. Algernon S. Dyer) 

Boil onions until tender, take out middles, and 
mix them with cooked chopped meat or fish. 
Put this mixture back into onion shells, with 
crumbs on top, and place all in baking dish 
with a little water or milk (if milk, add when 
nearly done), and bake until very tender. 

German Luncheon Dish 

(Mrs. Algernon 8. Dyer) 

Cook spinach in the usual way, and heap on 
middle of a platter ; garnish with slices of hard- 
boiled egg, and place round all thin slices of 
broiled bacon. 

Cucumbers to Serve with Broiled Steak 

(Mrs. L. W. Scrihner) 

Peel good sized cucumbers, cut lengthwise 
and then across through the middle. Sprinkle 
heavily with salt and let stand an hour. Drain 
and put into upper part of double boiler with 
drawn butter sauce. Season with pepper and 
salt, a bit of bay leaf, and a drop or two of 
vinegar. Cook until soft and transparent. Serve 
in sauce plates as a vegetable. 

35 



Cucumbers to Serve with Roast Beef 

(Frances B. Dyer) 

Peel and slice good sized cucumbers ; put layer 
of cracker crumbs in bottom of baking dish, and 
on this a layer of the sliced cucumbers, chopped 
green peppers, and chopped parsley; sprinkle 
with salt and add bits of butter. Over this put 
another layer of cracker crumbs, followed by 
layer of the cucumbers, green peppers, and pars- 
ley. Over all another layer of cracker crumbs, 
covered with bits of butter. Add milk until it 
can just be seen round edge of dish and bake 1 
hour. Serve in baking-dish. 

Scalloped Tomatoes 

(Minnie Alford) 

Butter your baking-dish well. Cut the skinned 
tomatoes in small pieces and line the bottom, 
then a sprinkle of salt and pepper, with a little 
butter. Now bread crumbs, very fine, then sea- 
soning and so on until the dish is full. A little 
onion in this is a great improvement. An egg^ 
well beaten, poured over the top, adds a great 
deal to the taste. 

Grandmother's Potatoes 

(Mrs. Oeorge Riggs) 

Pare large potatoes, and cut a tunnel through 
the centre of each one with an apple corer. 
Draw a small sausage through each one; place 
them in the pan and lay a slice of fat salt pork 
or bacon on each one. Bake until the potatoes 

36 



are done, basting with hot water whenever 
necessary. 

Salsify, or Oyster Plant 

(Mrs, Thomas L. Kimball) 

Wash, scrape, and throw into cold water. Cut 
into inch pieces and boil rapidly. Drain them 
well. Add milk, butter, salt, and pepper, as for 
an oyster stew. 

Pleasant Point Corn Fritters 

(Mrs. James B. Elden) 

To 1 heaping cup of corn add: 

1 Qgg, 

% cup sweet milk; 

1/2 cup flour; 

1 heaping teaspoon baking powder; 

Add a little salt and pepper. 

Fry in deep lard. 

Potato Border 

(Sally Akers Ely) 

Make a rim of cold mashed potato on a stone- 
ware platter, leaving a space in the middle. Fill 
the space with creamed fish, or minced beef. 
Sprinkle with crumbs and dry cheese, dot with 
butter, and brown in the oven. 

Chopped Potato 

(Mrs. Walter Hill) 

Cut cold, boiled potatoes into dice, and add 
half as much hard-boiled egg coarsely chopped. 
Season with salt and pepper; add half a cupful 
of rich hot milk or cream and heat thoroughly. 

37 



Escalloped Parsnips 

(Mrs. George Sawyer) 

Cut cold, boiled parsnips into dice. Put into 
a baking-dish in layers, with crumbs, parsley, 
and grated cheese in between, having crumbs, 
cheese, and butter on top. Pour over a little 
cream sauce and bake until brown. 



38 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



SALADS AND DRESSINGS 

Mountain View Lobster Salad 

(Fannie E. MilUken) 

Cut the lobster meat in small pieces and sea- 
son with salt. Make nests or cups of crisp let- 
tuce leaves; break the poorer leaves and mix 
with the lobster; put a large spoonful of the 
lobster, mixed with some of the dressing, in each 
leaf, with a spoonful of the dressing on top just 
before serving. Garnish with the coral sprinkled 
over the dressing and with the lobster claws 
around the dish. 

DKESSING 

1/2 tablespoon mustard. 

1 tablespoon sugar. 

2 tablespoons melted butter. 
1 teaspoon salt. 

Make smooth, then add slowly 3 well-beaten 
eggs. To this add gradually % cup sweet 
milk; then add % cup vinegar, stirring the in- 
gredients thoroughly. Cook in a double boiler 
until a little thick. 

Potato Salad 

(Mrs. Emma Sands) 

A sufficient number of boiled potatoes cut in 
cubes; a layer of potatoes alternating with 

39 



chopped onions, parsley, pepper, salt, mustard, 
celery seed, and salad dressing. Spread over 
lettuce leaves. 

SALAD DKESSING 

Wet one rounding teaspoon each of mustard 
and cornstarch with vinegar. Add enough more 
vinegar to make a half cupful in all. Add l^^ 
cups milk, sweet or sour, 1 beaten egg, and but- 
ter, size of egg. Cook until it thickens, stirring 
constantly. 

An Old-Fashioned Salad 

(Bertha Peirce) 

Cut cold potatoes into slices and mix with 
shredded lettuce leaves. Cover salad dish with 
lettuce leaves, and place mixture upon them. 
Lay sliced cold boiled eggs upon the top and 
around the edge. Next to the green leaves, lay 
slices of cold beef or tongue. Pour dressing 
over all, adding a little onion juice, if desired. 

FKEITCH DKESSING 

Three tablespoonfuls of olive oil, 2 table- 
spoonfuls of vinegar — more if dressing seems 
too oily — % teaspoonf ul of mustard, % tea- 
spoonful of salt. Beat violently with egg-beater, 
then pour over salad. 

Salad Dressing 

(Mrs. A. M. Jose) 

1 unbeaten egg. Into this sift: 
1 scant teaspoon salt; 
1 teaspoon mustard ; 

40 



3 rounding teaspoons flour; 
6 teaspoons sugar. Mix, then add: 
% cup vinegar; 
% cup hot water; 
Small piece of butter. 

Stir till it thickens, but do not let boil. When 
cool add cream to thin. 

Chicken and Nut Salad 

(Mrs. Sewell Smith) 

1% cups diced chicken. 
1 cup chopped English walnuts. 
% cup apple diced. 

1 tablespoonful finely chopped celery to each 
cup of chicken, a dash of paprika. 
Mix with dressing and serve on lettuce leaves. 

Crossways Fruit Salad 

(Mrs. A. L. T. Cummings) 

1 can pineapple, cut. 

2 lbs. California grapes, seeded. 
1/2 lb. English walnuts or pecans. 
This quantity is for a large company. 

DRESSING 

1 tablespoon mustard. 
1 tablespoon sugar. 
A very little cayenne. 
1 teaspoon salt. 

3 eggs (yolks). 
Juice of % lemon. 
1/4 cup vinegar. 

1 pt. best olive oil. 

41 



Beat yolks and dry ingredients until very 
light and thick. Add a few drops of oil at a 
time until the dressing becomes very thick and 
rather hard ; then add oil more rapidly. When 
very thick add a little vinegar, continuing until 
all the oil and vinegar have been used. Add 
lemon juice and a full cup of whipped cream. 
(Dressing will keep a long time on ice.) 

Salad without Vinegar 

(Mrs. Andrew L. Berry) 

Arrange lettuce as usual, placing cut oranges, 
grape fruit, or bananas over it, a little sugar, 
with a sprinkle of lemon juice upon the whole. 

Another way: Strew ripe currants and a little 
sugar over the lettuce. 

Sardine Salad 

(Mrs. Emma J. Harmon) 

Arrange sardines on a bed of lettuce. Season 
with minced onion, chopped pickle, capers, and 
hard-boiled eggs. Pour over French dressing, 
season with tomato catsup, and serve cold. 

Egg Salad 

(Jennie Shepard) 

Cut fine 3 hard-boiled eggs and 4 stalks of 
celery. Serve on lettuce with French dressing. 

Vegetable Salad 

(Ella Deering) 

Mix equal parts or any desired proportion of 
cold boiled vegetables sliced or chopped. Heap 

42 



on a platter or shallow dish, lined with lettuce 
leaves, and serve with a cream dressing. Gar- 
nish with sprays of parsley. 

French Dressing 

(Mrs. George Riggs) 

Put a pinch each of salt and pepper into a 
bowl. Pour in 4 tablespoonfuls of the best olive 
oil and stir until the salt is dissolved. Add 1 
tablespoonful of vinegar and stir and beat until 
no separate globules of oil are visible. 

To French dressing made according to direc- 
tions given above may be added at discretion 
celery salt, capers, horseradish, mustard, Wor- 
cestershire sauce, sage, minced olives or pickles. 

Materials for salads combined with lettuce : — 
Diced tongue, chicken, ham, or beef. String 
beans, spinach, potato, celery, asparagus, peas, 
beets, beet greens. Sardines or any cold bits 
of fish. Almost any sort of fruit, which, how- 
ever, needs a special dressing. Whenever the 
supply of material is small, add hard-boiled 
eggs, chopped or in slices. Develop the * ^ salad 
habit,'* which is only of recent growth in New 
England. 

Egg Dressing 

(Mary Shepard) 

Eub the yolks of 4 hard-boiled eggs to a 
smooth paste with salt, cayenne, mustard, and 
sugar to season. Add gradually 4 tablespoon- 
fuls each of oil and vinegar and fold in the stiffly 
beaten white of an egg. 

43 



Boiled Salad Dressing 

(Nellie Harmon) 

Beat the yolks of 3 eggs with 2 tablespoonfuls 
of oil, 1 cupful of cream, and salt, sugar, mus- 
tard, and cayenne to season. Cook in a double 
boiler until it thickens, adding gradually % 
cupful of boiling vinegar. Take from the fire, 
add the whites of 3 eggs, beaten to a stiff froth, 
and chill. 

Cabbage Salad 

(Mrs. F. W. Foster) 

The white heart of cabbage, chopped fine; 
sprinkle % teaspoon of salt over, and put on 
ice to chill. Slice one hard-boiled egg over 
when chilled, and pour mayonnaise dressing 
over, and serve. 

Cheese Dressing 

(Frances B. Dyer) 

Eub the yolks of 2 hard-boiled eggs to a 
smooth paste with 4 tablespoons of oil ; then add 
1 tablespoon of vinegar and 1 of grated cheese 
with 1 teaspoonful of made mustard. Serve 
with the hearts of lettuce. 



44 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



VI 
PIES 

Quillcote Pie Crust 

(Mrs. Helen E. Bradbury) 

1 qt. flour. 

1 teaspoon salt. 

1 large iron spoon lard. 

1 full cup butter. 

Work it all together with spoon until it is 
thoroughly mixed. In summer add a little ice 
water and mix it quite stiff. Eoll out three times, 
then put it in a tight roll and set it down cellar 
until the next day. This will make three medium 
pies. 

Lemon Sponge Pie 

(Mrs. H. A. Owen) 

1 lemon. 

1 cup sugar. 

2 eggs. 

1 cup milk. 

2 teaspoons flour. 

1 tablespoon butter. 

Cream the butter, sugar, and add the flour. 
Separate the whites and yolks of the eggs, mix- 
ing the yolks with the sugar and butter. Grate 
the rind of the lemon and add the juice, then 
the cup of milk. Lastly stir in the well- whipped 
whites of the eggs and bake in one crust. 

45 



1^ 



Every-Day Pie Crust 

(Myra Darrah) 

3 cups flour. 

1 cup lard ^^ cut in.'' 
A little salt. 

Water enough to mix. 

2 tablespoons butter rolled in. 
This makes enough for two pies. 

Cranberry Pie 

(Eliza S. Libby) 

1 cup of cranberries, chopped fine. 

1 cup of chopped raisins. 

1 cup of sugar. 

1 tablespoonful of flour. 

% cup boiling water, scant. 

Salt and vanilla. 

Mix flour and sugar, add water, then raisins. 

Beat smooth and add cranberries last. 

Bake in two crusts. 

Mock Cherry Pie 

(Mrs. Robert G. Harbutt) 

1 cup of cranberries. 
1 cup sugar. 

1 cup raisins, unchopped. 

% cup water in which put 1% teaspoonfuls of 
vanilla. 

Sprinkle plate with flour to thicken pie. Bake 
in two crusts. Makes one pie. 

Filling for Currant Pie 

(Mrs. Helen E. Bradbury ) 

2 eggs, 1 heaping cup sugar, 2 large cups cur- 
rants. Beat the yolks of the eggs with the sugar. 

46 



Add the whites, beaten to a stiff froth, the last 
thing. Make a lattice work of pastry for the 
top crust of the pie. 

Buxton Date Pie 

(Mrs. J. R. Ford) 

Soak the dates over night and stew until they 
can be strained. Mix with 1 qt. of milk 3 eggs, 
a little salt, and nutmeg. Bake with an under 
crust only. One pound of dates is sufficient for 
three pies. 

Rhubarb Pie 

(Mrs. John Fogg) 

1 cup chopped rhubarb. 

1 cup sugar. 

1 egg. 

1 teaspoonful lemon. 

Salt. 

Bake with two crusts. 

Mock Mince Pie 

(Mrs. Priscilla Hanson) 

1 cup molasses. 

1 cup sugar. 
% cup butter. 
1/2 cup vinegar. 

Boil together for 1 minute. Then add 4 
crackers rolled, 2 beaten eggs, spice to suit the 
taste, and 1 cup chopped raisins. 

Secretary's Chocolate Pie 

(Mrs. H. H. Locke) 

% cup of sugar. 

2 level tablespoons of cornstarch. 

47 



1 tablespoon of chocolate or cocoa. 
Yolks of 2 eggs. 

A little salt. 

2 cups of milk. 
Vanilla. 

Bake in one crust. 

MEKINGUE 

Whites of 2 eggs. 
1 tablespoon sugar. 
Brown in oven. 

Lemon-Apple Pie 

(Mrs. George Frazier) 

Grate rind and strain juice of 2 lemons. Core, 
pare, and chop fine 1 large tart apple. Pound 
1 soft cracker very fine. Melt 2 teaspoons 
butter and mix with the cracker crumbs. 

Mix lemon rind and juice with chopped apple, 
stir with them 2 level cups of sugar. 

Beat yolks of 2 eggs to thick froth, whites to 
stiffness, then both together. 

Beat these with the lemon, apple, and sugar. 
Mix the buttered crumbs with all. Cover pie 
plates; put a broad brim around their edges, 
and fill as tarts with the mixture. Bake 20 
minutes, or until the crust is done. Orange Pie 
in same way, with less sugar. 



48 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



VII 
PUDDINGS 

The President's Pudding Sauce 

(Mrs. J. W. MeserveJ 

% cup butter. 

1 cup powdered sugar. 

% cup cream or milk. 

4 tablespoons wine or 1 teaspoon vanilla. 

Beat the butter to a cream, add sugar gradu- 
ally; when light and creamy add wine, then 
cream a little at a time, place in a dish of hot 
water till the sauce is creamy and no longer. 

Honeycomb Pudding 

(Mrs. F. W. Foster) 

1 cup chopped suet. 

1 cup chopped raisins. 

1 cup molasses. 

1 cup sweet milk. 

3 cups flour. 

1 teaspoon soda sifted in flour, spice to taste. 

Steam 3 hours and serve with hard sauce. 

Foamy Pudding Sauce 

(Mrs. Priseilla Hanson) 

1 cup sugar. 

2 eggs. 

Beat sugar and yolks together in a bowl. Set 
49 



in boiling water. Then add whites beaten stiff. 
Put a small piece of butter and 1 tablespoon 
sherry in a bowl. Pour over the hot sauce just 
before serving. 

Sokokis Indian Pudding 

(Mrs. Oeorge Riggs) 

1 qt. skimmed milk. 

l^ pt. Indian meal. 

1 cup molasses. 

A little salt. 

Scald the milk and add the ingredients while 
it is hot ; let it cool, then pour into deep earthen 
pan, with straight sides, and bake 3 or 4 hours 
in a slow oven. Add 1/2 cup cold milk, and stir 
after putting in to bake. 

Tory Hill Pudding 

(Mrs. James Woodman) 

1 pt. of nice bread crumbs to 1 qt. of milk. 

1 cup sugar. 

The yolks of 4 eggs well beaten. 

The grated peel of a lemon. 

Butter size of an eg^. Bake until done, hut 
not watery. 

Whip the whites of the eggs to a froth, and 
beat in % teacup of sugar. Flavor with lemon. 
Spread over the pudding a layer of jelly or fruit 
either fresh or dried. Pour the whites over 
this and set in the oven till brown. To be 
eaten with sugar and cream, or it is good 
without. 

50 



Sandwich Pudding 

(Mrs. Martha C. Hanson) 

Make a batter of 1 cup of sugar and 1 egg. 

Butter the size of an egg. 

1/2 cup milk. 

1 teaspoon cream tartar. 

1/2 teaspoon soda. 

11/2 cups flour. 

Have a quart pudding dish half full of sliced 
sour apples and pour the batter over them. 

Bake one hour. To be eaten with a sugar 
sauce. 

Hilltop Blueberry Roll 

(Mrs. Jane C. Akers) 

1 cup milk. 

1 tablespoon butter. 

2 teaspoons baking powder sifted in flour. 
1/2 teaspoon salt. 

Flour enough to roll. 

Add sifted flour and baking powder, and salt 
to m.ilk; then add melted butter, and roll out 
thin. 

Add berries to one end of roll, fold over, add 
more berries and fold again; and keep adding 
berries and folding until roll is filled. Fold over 
ends of roll and bake about % hour. 



SAUCE FOR ROLL 

White of egg beaten stiff with 2 tablespoons 
of milk and 1 cup sugar. 



51 



Apple Indian Pudding 

(Mrs. L. A, Berry) 

% cup Indian meal. 

% cup molasses. 

1 qt. milk. 

Teaspoon salt. 

Scald the milk, and pour it slowly on the meal, 
molasses, and salt. Add small piece of butter, 
bit of cinnamon, and ginger. Fill pudding dish 
half full of quartered, sweet apples. Pour in 
mixture, and add 1 cupful cold milk. Bake 
slowly 3 hours. 



Pork Pudding 

(Mrs. J. W. Rankins) 

1 cup salt pork, chopped fine. 
1 cup raisins, chopped fine. 

1 cup molasses. 

2 cups sweet milk. 

3 cups flour. 

1 teaspoon soda. 

Little of different kinds of spice. 

Put in a 3-pt. tin, set in a steamer, cover with 
a cloth. Steam 2 hours, do not lift the cover 
while steaming. 

SAUCE 

1 cup sugar. 

2 tablespoons flour. 
2 cups hot water. 

Cook a few moments, then flavor to taste. 



52 



Plymouth Custards 

(Cornelia D. Burhank) 

4 eggs. 

1 qt. milk. 
Scant cup sugar. 

Put into custard cups, grate a little nutmeg 
over top. 

Set in jar of hot water in the oven. 
Bake 20 minutes. 

Indian Tapioca Pudding 

(Mrs. George Libhy) 

3 tablespoons pearl tapioca. 

2 tablespoons Indian meal. 
1 qt. milk. 

% cup sugar. 

14 cup molasses. 

Salt. 

Soak tapioca and meal in 1 cup of the milk. 
Scald the rest of the milk, then add meal and 
tapioca. When cool enough add 1 ^gg. Just 
before putting into the oven add 1 cup of cold 
water. 

Bake 2% hours. 

Coffee Tapioca Pudding 

(Mrs. John Fogg) 

Soak 2 tablespoons tapioca over night. In the 
morning drain and add 3 cups coffee. Cook until 
soft in a double boiler. Thicken with 1 tea- 
spoon cornstarch. Add % cup sugar and a 
little salt. 

Serve with sugar and cream. 
53 



River Road Pudding 

(Mrs. Frank Harmon) 

Soak 2 tablespoonf uls tapioca in water enough 
to cover for 2 hours. Then place over fire in 
1 pt. milk. When boiling stir in yolks of 2 
eggs beaten with 1 cup white sugar. Boil 2 or 3 
minutes. Vanilla to taste. Have ready in a 
dish the whites of the eggs beaten to a froth. 
Pour hot pudding over it. 

Caroline Pudding 

(Mrs. C. F. Howe) 

1 qt. milk. 

1 cup grated bread crumbs. 
% cup molasses. 
Little salt. Piece of butter. 
Spice to taste. Bake slowly 3 hours, stirring 
often, so as to prevent its having any crust. 

Pudding Crusts 

(Mrs. Ambrose Weeks) 

Pie paste is a suitable cover for boiled or 
baked fruit puddings. 

Potato crust for boiled fruit puddings is made 
as follows: Boil and mash 3 or 4 good potatoes. 
Mix 2 cupfuls of sifted flour with 2 of potato. 
Use a chopping knife, so as to keep free from 
clogging. Chop in 1 cup butter and 1 teaspoon 
salt. Mix to a paste with very cold water. 
Gather into a heap without moulding, on to 
the pie board, to roll out. Puddings should be 
boiled in a cloth. 

54 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



VIII 
COMPANY DESSERTS 

Milk Sherbet 

(Mrs. Ambrose Weeks) 

8 cups milk. 
6 lemons. 
3 cups sugar. 

Mix juice (strained) and sugar, stirring con- 
stantly while adding milk slowly. 

Chocolate Sauce for Vanilla Ice Cream 

(Sara J. Morton) 

2 squares chocolate. 
1 cup sugar. 
1 teaspoon cornstarch. 
1 cup boiling water. 
Boil until thick. 

Strawberry Blanc-Mange 

(Mrs. Gilbert Berry) 

Stew nice, ripe strawberries, strain off the 
juice and sweeten it to taste. Place over the 
fire, and when it boils, stir in cornstarch wet in 
cold water, allowing 2 tablespoonfuls of corn- 
starch for each pint of juice; continue stirring 
until sufficiently cooked. Pour into moulds wet 
in cold water, and set away to cool; serve with 
cream and sugar and fresh strawberries if de- 

55 



sired. Easpberry blanc-mange prepared in the 
same way is equally good. 

Junior Dorcas Ice Cream 

(Alice Emery) 

1 qt. roilk. 
1 qt. cream. 
1 qt. fruit. 
3 cups sugar. 

Mix sugar and fruit together. Press through 
a collander and freeze. 

Pineapple Sherbet 

(Mrs. Angelia Harmon) 

1 tablespoonful of gelatine dissolved in % pt- 
of warm water. After it is dissolved, add an- 
other % pt. of warm water, 1 pt. of sugar, and 
1 can of pineapple, chopped fine, and added 
with the juice. Then freeze. 

Ossipee Pyramids 

(Mrs. Frank Eargraves) 

Whip firmly a pint of cream. Sweeten and 
chill. Serve in small glasses. Beat stifily the 
whites of six eggs. Sweeten, and gradually stir 
in a small cup of currant jelly. When ready to 
serve, drop a spoonful of the beaten Qgg in the 
center of each dish of cream, in the shape of a 
pyramid. 

Chocolate Whips 

(Mrs. H. E. Locke) 

1 pt. of milk. 

2 eggs. 

56 



Pinch of salt. 
Sweeten to taste. 

Heat the milk, adding two tablespoons of 
grated chocolate. 

Then add the eggs and other ingredients. 
Fill glasses two-thirds full. 
Drop whipped cream in each. 

Apple or Banana Fritters 

(Mrs. H. M. Thurston) 

1 cup flonr. 

1% teaspoons baking powder. 

3 tablespoons powdered sugar. 

% teaspoon salt. 

% cup milk. 

1 Qgg, 

Cut the apple or banana in thin slices. 

SAUCE 

Grated rind and juice of 1 lemon. 
^ cup Sherry wine. 
% cup sugar. 

2 eggs. 

Mix lemon, wine, sugar, and yolks of eggs. 
Stir vigorously over fire until it thickens, then 
add whites, beaten stiff. 

Apple Custard 

(Mrs. Frank Hargraves) 

3 eggs. 

1 cup sugar. 

1 cup sifted sour apple sauce. 

% cup butter. 

57 



Flavor with vanilla. Make nice crust for 
holders. Bake in round muffin tins. 

Custard Souffle 

(Mrs. George E. Smith) 

Eub 2 scant tablespoonfuls butter to a cream; 
add 2 tablespoonfuls flour and pour on gradu- 
ally 1 cup hot milk. Cook 8 minutes in the 
double boiler, stirring often. Separate the 
yolks and whites of 4 eggs. Put the whites 
on ice. Beat the yolks. Add 2 tablespoonfuls 
sugar and add to the milk and set away to cool. 
% hour before serving, beat the whites stiff and 
cut them in lightly. Bake in a buttered pud- 
ding dish in a moderate oven 30 minutes. Serve 
at once with creamy sauce. 

Fig Pudding 

(Mrs. Monroe Marsh) 

% lb. suet, finely chopped. 

% lb. (scant) figs, finely chopped. 

2 heaping cups bread crumbs, soaked in % 
cup milk. 

% cup sugar. 

2 well-beaten eggs last. 

Mix thoroughly and steam 4 hours. Serve 
with hard or foamy sauce. 

Fruit Compote 

(Mrs. Charles Irving) 

5 oranges, cut fine. 
4 bananas, sliced fine. 
Juice of 1 lemon. 

58 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



1 cup strawberries, cut fine; or substitute 
malaga grapes if strawberries are out of season. 

1 cup walnuts. 

Sprinkle with 6 tablespoons sugar, and 1/2 
teaspoon cinnamon. 

% pt. whipped cream. 



59 



IX 
CAKE 

The Doctor's Cream Cakes 

fMrs. A. G. Wiley) 

Boil together 1 cup water and % cup butter, 
then add 1 cup flour, all at once, and beat 
vigorously. When mixture cleaves from pan, 
remove from fire and break in 4 eggs, one at a 
time, beating for 2 minutes after adding each 
egg. After the mixture is cool, drop by spoon 
ful into buttered pan and bake 30 minutes in 
a moderate oven. 

FILLING FOR CAKES 

Mix together % cup of sugar, I/2 cup of flour, 
and 2 eggs. Pour on this 1 pt. of hot milk and 
cook in double boiler. Flavor to taste. 

Quick Cake 

(Mrs. Alonzo Harmon) 

1 cup sugar. 

11/2 cups sifted flour. 

2 teaspoonfuls baking powder, all together. 
Add 14 cup butter. 

Break 2 eggs in a cup, fill with sweet milk, 
beat all together. 

1 teaspoonful vanilla. 
60 



Chocolate Cake 

(Helen King Marshall) 

1 cup brown sugar. 
% cup sour milk. 
% cup butter. 

2 squares chocolate, dissolved in % cup hot 
water. 

1 teaspoon soda. 
1 cup flour, before sifting. 
Vanilla. 

This makes a thin mixture, but do not be 
alarmed, as it is quite right. 

FROSTIITG FOE CHOCOLATE CAKE 

1 cup granulated sugar. 3 tablespoons hot 
water. Boil until it makes a soft ball in water. 
Turn this over white of one egg, well beaten. 
Beat all together until stiff, then turn over the 
cake. 

Mocha Cake 

(Mrs. Richard Lihhy) 

1 cup sugar. 

1 cup flour. 

1 teaspoon cream of tartar. 

% teaspoon soda. 

1 large teaspoon melted butter. 
% cup boiling milk. 

2 eggs, not beaten. 

Sift flour, sugar, cream of tartar, soda to- 
gether twice. 

Add butter, then break in eggs, stir. Add 
milk last. 

61 



stir briskly. Bake in moderate oven 20 
minutes. 

FKOSTING 

1 cup powdered sugar. Small piece of butter. 

2 tablespoons coffee. 
2 teaspoons cocoa. 
% teaspoon vanilla. 

Cream butter and sugar. Add cocoa, then 
coffee and vanilla. Add more sugar, if neces- 
sary. Spread with knife dipped in hot water. 

Ribbon Cake 

(Mae ^killings) 

2^2 cups sugar. 

1 cup butter. 

1 cup sour milk. 

1 teaspoon cream tartar. 

% teaspoon soda. 

4 cups flour. 

4 eggs. 

For the dark part, reserve one-third. 
1 cup raisins. 

1 cup currants. 

2 tablespoons of molasses. 

1 teaspoon each of all kinds of spices. 

Grange Cake 

(Mrs. J. W. Rankins) 

3 cups of sugar. 
1 cup of butter. 

5 cups of flour. 

1% cups of milk or water. 
62 



1% cups of chopped raisins. 

2 eggs. 

2 tablespoonfuls of molasses. 

1 teaspoonful soda, dissolved in a little water. 
Spice. 

Delicious Cake 

(Mrs. George Lihhy) 

2 cups sugar. 
1 cup butter. 
1 cup milk. 

3 cups flour. 

3 eggs. 

% teaspoon soda. 

1 teaspoon cream tartar. 

Cream butter and sugar together; add the 
yolks of the eggs, then the beaten whites. Dis- 
solve the soda in the milk, rub the cream of 
tartar in the flour and add last. 

Cheap Fruit Cake 

(Mrs. F. J. Leavitt) 

2 cups of sugar. 

^2 cup of molasses. 

% cup milk. 

1 cup of butter. *^ 

4 cups of flour. 

1 teaspoon soda. 

3 eggs. 

Spice of all kinds. 
1 cup raisins. 
1 cup currants. 
% cup citron. 
Will make two loaves. 
63 



Angel Cake 

(Mrs. George T. Edwards) 

1% cups of sugar. 

% cup of butter. 

% cup of milk. 

2% cups of flour. ' 

1 teaspoon of cream tartar. 
14 teaspoon of soda. 

5 eggs (the whites only). 

Put all the parts together and then add the 
whites of the eggs beaten to a froth. The same 
recipe, using the yolks, makes a very nice cake. 

Sponge Cake 

(Henrietta Elden) 

3 eggs. 

1% cups sugar. 

% cup cold water. 

2 cups flour. 

1 teaspoonful cream tartar. 
% teaspoonful soda. 

Salt. 

Sift cream tartar with 1 cup of the flour; 
dissolve soda in a little hot water. 
Rind and juice of 1 orange. 

Brick House Bride's Cake 

(Mrs. W. 8. Moulton) 

Whites of 5 eggs. 
11/2 cups of sugar. 
% cup of butter. 
% cup of milk. 

2 cups flour. 

64 



1 teaspoonful cream tartar. 

1/^ teaspoonful of soda. 

Flavor to taste; almond is best. 

Apple Sauce Cake 

(Mrs. Duncan Inness) 

1 cup sugar. 

1 cup apple sauce. 

% cup shortening. 

li/o cups flour (full measure). 

1 teaspoon saleratus. 

Eaisins and spice of all kinds. 

Marble Cake 

(Mrs. Elmer Boothhy) 

1 cup sugar. 
1/2 cup butter. 
1 cup milk. 
21/2 cups flour. 
1 egg, 

1 teaspoon soda. 

2 teaspoons cream tartar. 

Take % of mixture and add to it % teaspoon 
each of cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and allspice, 
with % cup raisins. 

Put in pan in alternate spoonfuls. 

Tarts 

(Mrs. F. J. Leavitt) 

3 cups of flour. 
% cup butter. 
% cup lard. 

1 teaspoon cream tartar. 
65 



% teaspoon soda. 

White of 1 egg beaten to a froth. 

% cup of cold water. 

Bake in a quick oven. 

Fill with any sort of jelly or preserve. 

Twin Elms Date Cake 

(Mrs. Jane C. Akers) 

V2 cup soft butter. 
ly^ cups brown sugar. 

2 eggs. 

% cup milk. 
1% cups of flour. 

3 teaspoons baking powder. 

% teaspoon each of cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, 
and salt. 

% lb. dates, cut into pieces. 

Put all together at once, beat 3 minutes, and 
bake 40 minutes. 

Fudge Cake 

(Mrs. Sewell Smith) 

1 cup sugar. 

2 tablespoons cocoa. 
1/4 cup butter. 

1 egg, 

1 teaspoon salt. 

1 teaspoon soda dissolved in % cup sour milk. 
1% cups flour. 

14 cup boiling water; add a little vanilla. 
To be put together in above order. 
Bake in a shallow tin. When cool, split open 
and fill. 

66 



FILLING 

1 cup hot water. 
1 tablespoonful cocoa. 
% cup sugar. 
1 tablespoon butter. 

1 tablespoon cornstarch, mixed with % cup 
cold water; add a little vanilla. 
Cook until thick and spread when cool. 

Potato Flour Cake 

(Mrs. Oland Trask) 

4 eggs, beaten separate and then together. 
Add,— 

1 cup of sugar. 

Pinch of salt. 

1 tablespoon cold water. 

1 teaspoon vanilla, and a good half cup of 
potato flour with 

1 rounding teaspoon of baking powder in it. 

Marshmallow Fillings 

(Mrs. George Emery) 

1 cup brown sugar. 

1 cup white sugar. 

1 cup water. 

1 tablespoonful vinegar. 

Boil until thick like candy and stir in the 
beaten whites of 2 eggs and % 1^- of marsh- 
mallows. Boil up again and place it on the 
cake, letting each layer of filling cool before 
putting the cake on top of it. 

67 



Pleasant Point Eggless Cake 

(Mrs. Charles Nichols) 

1 cup sugar. 

% cup butter or lard. 

2 cups flour. 

1/2 teaspoonful soda. 
% cup sour milk. 
1 cup raisins. 

% teaspoonful each of cloves, cinnamon, nut- 
meg, and a little salt. 
Bake in a slow oven % of an hour. 

Cream Cakes 

(Mrs. L. A. Berry J 

1 cup hot water. 
% cup butter. 

3 eggs. 

1 heaping cup flour. 

Melt the butter in the hot water; while it 
boils slowly stir in flour till a smooth paste. 
Let cool while beating 3 eggs, then stir eggs 
into paste. Bake in hot oven 25 minutes. 
Makes thirteen. 

FILLING 

% cup sugar. 
3 spoonfuls flour, 
legg. 

1 cup boiling milk. 

Beat eggy add sugar and flour mixed. Stir 
in boiling milk, and cook till creamy. 



68 



Parsonage Macaroons 

(Mrs. Robert G. Harhutt) 

2 eggs, well beaten. 

1 tablespoonful butter melted. 

1 cup sugar. 

A little salt. 

4 tablespoonfuls flour. 

1% teaspoonfuls baking powder. 

% cup milk. 

2% cups rolled oats, dry. 

Flavor. 

Drop by spoonfuls on buttered tin, not very 
near together. Bake in rather a hot oven. Add 
chopped nuts or sprinkle with cocoanut, if you 
choose. 

Fryeburg Sponge Cake 

(Mrs. Sarah Ladd) 

1 cup of sugar. 

3 eggs. 

3 tablespoonfuls of milk. 

% teaspoonful of soda. 

1 teaspoonful of cream tartar. 

A little salt. 

1 cup of flour, rounded up. 

1 tablespoonful of cornstarch. 

Flavor. 

Snowball Cake 

(Mrs. H. A. Davis) 

1 cup sugar. 
% cup butter. 

1/2 cup sweet milk. 

2 cups flour. ' 
% teaspoonful soda. 

69 



1 teaspoonful cream tartar. 

Whites of 4 eggs. 

Beat butter and sugar thoroughly. Add the 
whites of eggs beaten to a stiff foam. Milk and 
soda last. Flavor to taste. 

Silver Cake 

(Lena R. Jose) 

1 cup of sugar. 
Whites of 4 eggs. 
% cup butter. 

2 cups flour. 

% teaspoonful of soda. 

1 teaspoonful cream tartar. 
1/2 cup of milk, put in last. 
A little salt. 

Strawberry Frosting 

(Mrs. Frank L. Tarbox) 

The white of 1 egg, beaten stiff; 1 cup of 
sugar; % cup of strawberries, lightly mashed, 
beat all together till a stiff froth. 

Poverty Cake 

(Mrs. Eudoocy Eaton) 

% cup sugar. 
% cup molasses. 
% cup sour milk. 

2 cups flour. 

1 cup chopped raisins. 
All kinds of spices. 
1 good teaspoon soda. 
4 large tablespoons melted butter. 
70 



Cream Puffs 

(Mrs. Leicis Shordon) 

14 cup butter, melted in 1 cup boiling water. 
Stir in 1 cup flour while boiling; take from 
stove, cool; 3 eggs, one after the other with- 
out beating, drop on buttered tins, far enough 
apart; bake in quick oven 30 minutes. 



FILLING 

1 cup milk. 

V2 cup sugar. 

Tliicken with cornstarch. Flavor with vanilla. 



Scripture Cake 

(Mrs. T. W. Meserve) 

1 cup butter Judges 5 : 25 

31/2 cups flour I Kings 4: 22 

2 cups sugar Jer. 6 : 20 

2 cups raisins I Sam. 30 : 12 

2 cups figs I Sam. 30 : 12 

1 cup water Gen. 24 : 17 

1 cup almonds Gen. 43 : 11 

% doz. eggs Isa. 10 : 14 

Tablespoon honey Exod. 16 : 21 

A pinch of salt Lev. 2 : 13 

Spices to taste I Kings 10 : 10 

1/2 teaspoon soda Matt. 13 : 33 

1 teaspoon cream tartar Matt. 13 : 33 

Father Solomon's advice for making 

good boys Prov. 23 : 13 

71 



Gold Cake 

(Mrs. H. A. Davis) 

2 cups, not quite full, of flour, 

1 cup sugar. 

% cup sweet milk. 

% teaspoonful soda. 

1 teaspoonful cream tartar. 

Yolks of 4 eggs. 

Flavor to taste. 



72 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



X 

COOKIES AND DOUGHNUTS 

Salmon Falls Sugar Cookies 

(Mrs. W. 8. Moulton) 

1 cup butter. 

2 cups sugar. 

3 eggs. 

1 teaspoonful cream tartar. 

1 teaspoonful soda. 
Flour enough to roll out. 

Moderation Hermits 

(Mrs. Frank Hargraves) 

2 cups sugar. 

1 cup butter. 

3 eggs. 

2 cups finely chopped raisins. 

1 teaspoonful soda, dissolved in a little hot 
water. 

1 teaspoonful of all kinds of spices. 
1 small piece citron. 

Ginger Snaps 

(Mae ^killings) 

% cup molasses. 
% cup sugar. 
1/2 cup butter. 

73 



Set on the fire and boil 5 minutes. Cool, 
then add, — 
1 egg. 

1 teaspoon ginger. 
1 teaspoon soda. 

1 tablespoon vinegar. 

Flour enough to roll; roll thin. 

Jumbles 

. (Mrs. Leonard Towle) 

1% cups sugar. 

2 eggs. 

1/2 cup butter. 
^2 cup milk. 

1 teaspoon soda. 

2 teaspoons cream tartar. 
Lemon to taste. 

Mix as soft as can be handled; cut with small 
cutter, and sprinkle top with cocoanut. 

York County Doughnuts 

(Mrs. Perley A. Berry) 

1 dessert spoon thick sour cream. 
% cup thick sour milk. 
% cup sweet milk. 

1 rounding teaspoon soda dissolved in the 
above. 

1 egg beaten in. 
1 rounding cup sugar. 
% teaspoon vanilla. 
Pinch of ginger. 
% teaspoon salt. 

Knead and roll to 1/2 inch thickness. 
74 



Fry in hot fat, turning many times and roll- 
ing in sugar, if preferred. 

Eecipe makes 3 doz. doughnuts, and these 
never soak fat. 

The President's Brownies 

(Mrs. J. W. Meserve) 

1 cup sugar. 
% cup flour. 

% cup melted butter. 

% cup walnuts broken in small pieces. 

2 eggs. 

2 squares chocolate. 

Bake in shallow tin, garnishing top with nuts. 

Muster Gingerbread 

(Henrietta Elden) 

% cup sugar. 

14 cup butter. 

1 egg. 

% cup molasses. 

% cup sour milk. 

1 even teaspoonful soda dissolved in the milk. 

1 teaspoonful ginger. 

A little salt. 

1% cups flour. 

Saco Hill Doughnuts 

(Mrs. J. R. Ford) 

1 cup sour milk. 
1 cup sugar. 
1 egg, 

75 



1 tablespoonful butter. 
1 teaspoonful soda. 
Salt, ginger, and nutmeg. 
Flour to roll soft. 

Oatmeal Cookies 

(Mrs. Alonzo Harmon) 

1 cup sugar. 
1/2 cup butter. 
1 cup oatmeal. 

1 cup cocoanut. 

2 cups flour. 

1 cup raisins, chopped. 

1 teaspoonful soda. 

7 tablespoonfuls sour milk. 

Nuts may be added. 

Drop a teaspoonful on buttered pan. 

Bar Mills Cookies 

(Mrs. H. A. Davis) 

1 cup molasses. 

1 cup sugar. 

1 cup shortening. 

1 teaspoonful ginger. 

1% teaspoonfuls soda, dissolved in a little 
hot water. 

2 eggs. 

Salt. Flour to knead well. 

Ladies' Fingers 

(Mrs. Q. H. Knox) 

1 cup sugar. 
% cup butter. 

76 



1 ^gg' 

^4^ cup milk. 

1 pt. flour. 

1 teaspoonful cream of tartar. 

% teaspoonful soda. 

1% teaspoonful vanilla. 

Cut in little strips, roll in sugar, and bake in 
a quick oven. Use your hands to roll them, 
instead of a rolling pin. 

Filled Cookies 

(Mrs. Lewis Shordon) 

1 cup sugar. 

% cup shortening (part lard and butter). 

1 egg. 

1^ cup milk. 
2% cups flour. 

2 teaspoonfuls cream tartar. 
1 teaspoonful soda. 

1 teaspoonful vanilla. 

Eoll thin; put cookies in pan, then put tea- 
spoon of filling on each. Place another cookie 
gently on top. 

FILLING 

1 cup chopped raisins. 
% cup sugar. 
% cup water. 
1 teaspoon flour. 
Cook until thick. 

Doughnuts 

(Sirs. Elmer BootKby) 

1 cup of sugar. 
^2 cup of butter. 

77 



1% cups of milk. 

1 teaspoon of soda. 

2 teaspoons cream tartar. 
2 eggs and a little nutmeg. 



78 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



XI 
PICKLES, ETC. 

Tory Hill India Relish 

(Mrs. A. G. Wiley) 

Put lyo cups salt on 1 peck chopped green 
tomatoes and let stand over night. In morning 
drain and add 1 medium cabbage, chopped fine, 
and boil all in 3 qts. vinegar % hour. Then add 
6 onions, 3 red peppers, 2 green peppers 
(chopped fine), 6 cups sugar, 2 tablespoons 
celery seed, 2 of mustard seed, and 1 table- 
spoon stick-cinnamon and whole cloves (in a 
bag). Cook all until onions are perfectly soft. 

Chili Sauce 

(Mrs. Norton Libhy) 

6 ripe tomatoes. 

2 onions. 

1 green pepper. 

1/^ cup granulated sugar. 

% cup good cider vinegar. 

1 teaspoonful each of cinnamon, allspice, and 
nutmeg, and 1/2 teaspoonful cloves. Scald and 
peel the tomatoes and cook with the onions and 
peppers till tender, then add the sugar, vinegar, 
and spices and cook 10 minutes longer. 

79 



Sweet Tomato Pickles 

(Mrs. Emma J. Harmon) 

1 gal. tomatoes. After they are sliced, salt 
and drain over night in a collander. 1 qt. good 
vinegar, 1 lb. brown sugar, 1 heaping table- 
spoon of all kinds of spice and the same of 
mustard, 1 teaspoonful of cayenne. Boil till 
tender. 

Sweet Pickle for Corning Beef 

(Mrs. Norton Lihhy) 

For 25 lbs. of meat. 

2 gals, water, lukewarm. 
1% lbs. of brown sugar. 

2 lbs. of rock salt. 
1 oz. saltpetre. 

Mix and let stand 24 hours, stirring fre- 
quently, so that it may be thoroughly dissolved 
before putting in meat. This will keep all win- 
ter, and is not too salt for slicing and frying. 
It is also delicious boiled to eat cold. 

Pickled Beets and Carrots 

(Mrs. Frank L. Tarhox) 

Boil beets until tender; remove the skins; 
slice while hot; cover with hot spiced vinegar 
that has been well sweetened. Carrot pickles 
are made in the same way. These are not only 
good, but make a bright bit of coloring for the 
table. 

Watermelon Sweet Pickles 

(Mrs. A. E. Harmon) 

5 lbs. of fruit. 

3 lbs. of sugar. 
1 pt. of vinegar. 

80 



Boil fruit in clear water until tender; drain, 
put into the vinegar and sugar. Cook until 
well flavored. Use all kinds of spice put in a 
thin cloth. 

Piccalilli 

(Mrs. Thomas L. Kimhall) 

1 peck green tomatoes, 4 peppers, 12 onions, 
chopped fine and drained through cheesecloth. 
Add,— 

1 10-cent pkg. pickling spices. 

1 tablespoon ground mustard. 

4 cups sugar. 

% cup salt, and cover with cold vinegar 
(about 2 qts.). Boil slowly nearly 2 hours. 

Rhubarb Jam 

(Minnie Alford) 

To 6 lbs. of rhubarb add 6 lbs. of sugar and 
6 large lemons. Cut the rhubarb in small pieces. 
Slice the lemons very thin. Put the fruit in a 
large bowl and cover with the sugar, letting it 
stand for 24 hours. Boil for about % of an 
hour. Do not stir more than necessary, as its 
great beauty is in not being all broken up. 
Put in glasses and cover with paper. 

Treasurer's Cucumber Pickles 

(Mrs. James B. Elden) 

To 1 gal. good vinegar add 1 cup salt and 1 
cup ground mustard. Each day add freshly 
picked cucumbers and stir with a wooden 
spoon. Eeady for use in 10 days, if cucumbers 
are very young. 

81 



Wayside Mixed Pickles 

(Mrs. G. W. Handy) 

2 qts. green tomatoes. 

2 qts. ripe tomatoes. 

3 green peppers. 

1 large ripe cucumber. 

2 bunches celery. 

3 large onions. 

1 small cabbage. 

Chop all together. Cover with % cup salt 
and let it stand over night. Drain off all liquid 
in the morning. Add 3 pts. vinegar, 2 lbs. 
brown sugar, 2 tablespoons mustard. Cook 1 
hour and seal. 

Spiced Currants 

(Mrs. George Berry) 

For every 5 lbs. currants take 2 qts. water 
and 1 pt. vinegar. 

1 tablespoon ground cinnamon. 

2 teaspoons ground cloves. 

1 teaspoon each of ground allspice and mace. 

Boil currants with the sugar. When quite 
thick, add vinegar and spices and boil, stirring 
well for 15 or 20 minutes more. 



82 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



XII 
MISCELLANEOUS 

Canned Tomatoes 

(Mrs. Charles Nichols) 

Remove the peeling from the tomatoes and 
place as many as possible in a jar. If required 
to cut them in two, do it down through instead 
of across. Put covers on jars, but do not snap 
them down. Place jars in steamer and cook 
until the top of the jar is too hot to place your 
hand upon it; remove the cover and fill with 
boiling water; see that all the air is out, and 
seal. Place jars in an earthen crock and pour 
enough boiling water in to come up around 
the neck of the glass jars and let them stand 
until cold. A pinch of salt added to each jar 
improves the flavor. 

Recipe for Canning String Beans 

(Mrs. Richard Lihhy) 

4 quarts of beans, broken. 

1 quart of boiling water. 

% cup of salt (table salt). 

Put water and salt in kettle. Add beans. 
Boil 10 minutes. Fill cans, to overflowing, with 
hot mixture. This amount, if heaped a little, 
will fill two 1-qt. cans. 

When the beans are to be served, soak in cold 
83 



water over night. In the morning pour off 
water, put in fresh. Soak until time to cook 
them. Cook as you would the fresh beans. 

Delicious Cranberry Sauce 

(Lillian Palmer) 

4 cups cranberries. 
3 cups sugar. 
2 cups water. 

Dissolve the sugar and then cook 15 minutes. 
Do not stir. 

Chocolate Creams 

(Mrs. George Hall) 

Dissolve 2 cups white sugar in % cup of boil- 
ing water and boil 5 minutes. Flavor with 
vanilla. Set the pan in cold water and beat till 
it creams, then mould into balls the size of a 
nutmeg and lay on buttered plates to cool. 
Melt % lb. of Baker's chocolate by scraping fine 
and placing in a bowl in boiling water. Add 
a little sugar, then dip the balls in this with a 
toothpick till they are well coated. Then cool 
in the buttered plates. 

Seminary Fudge 

(Sara J. Morton) 

2 cups sugar. 

% cup Karo corn syrup. 

% cup hot water. 

Boil until you can make a soft ball in water, 
then pour about one-third of it onto the beaten 
white of an egg. Boil the rest until it '' hairs,'' 

84 



then pour on to the other and beat. Add 1 tea- 
spoonful of vanilla and about a cup of chopped 
walnuts. Beat until very stiff and pour into 
buttered pan. 

Delicious Candy 

(Jessie Chase) 

2 cups sugar. 

% cup corn syrup. 

% cup water. 

A little salt. 

Put sugar, syrup, water, and salt on to cook. 
Stir occasionally until it strings or forms a hard 
ball, when put into cold water. Then stir into 
this hot syrup the whites of 2 eggs beaten to a 
stiff froth. Beat until it is stiff and creamy, 
and then add % lb. of English walnuts, broken 
into large pieces. Put in buttered dish to cool 
and cut into squares. 

Green Tomato Mincemeat 

(Mrs. C. W. Handy) 

4 qts. chopped apples. 

3 qts. chopped green tomatoes. 

1% lbs. raisins. 

1/2 lb. butter. 

2 lbs. brown sugar. 

1 cup molasses. 

1 qt. cider. 

2 tablespoons salt. 

2 teaspoons cinnamon. 
2 teaspoons allspice and clove.. 
Simmer together until thick, then seal. 
85 



Butter Scotch 

(Mrs. H. A. Owen) 

2 cups granulated sugar. 

% cup molasses. 

1 cup butter. 

1 cup hot water. 

1 tablespoon vinegar. 

Boil gently until it threads from the spoon. 
A cup of cocoanut shredded, or one of nuts, is a 
very nice addition just before removing from 
the stove. Let it cool and cut in squares. 

Pineapple Lemonade 

(Mrs. A. E. Harmon) 

1 pt. water. 

1 pt. grated pineapple. 
1 cupful sugar. 
Juice of 3 lemons. 

Make syrup by boiling water and sugar to- 
gether. Add pineapple and juice. 

Cool, strain, and add 1 qt. of ice water. 

Cheese Mould 

(Mrs. Lewis Brown) 

Break up new cheese into small pieces, put it 
in double boiler, cover with milk or cream, a 
little salt, paprika, "Worcestershire sauce. Melt 
and take off and cool, then mould it like a lump 
of butter. 

Welsh Rarebit 

(Mrs. G. H. Knox) 

1 tablespoon butter. 
1 teaspoon cornstarch. 
86 



% cup thin cream. 

% lb. cheese. 

% teaspoon salt. 

% teaspoon mustard. 

Cayenne to taste. 

Yolk of 1 egg. 

Melt butter, add cornstarch, stir until well 
mixed; add cream gradually and cook 2 min- 
utes ; add cheese, cut in small pieces ; stir until 
melted; season. Add beaten yolk and cook 
% minute. 

Pour over zephyrettes or toast. 

Cheese Crackers 

(Cornelia D. Burhank) 

Take saltines, butter lightly. Grate cheese 
over butter, thickly. If cheese is soft, cut in 
very thin slices and lay on the crackers. Lay 
side by side in a large flat pan, and bake till 
brown in a hot, quick oven. 

To Improve Roast Lamb 

(Mrs. Andrew L. Berry) 

To make lamb extra tender and nice to the 
taste, a noted cook of a local old-time hostelry 
used to plunge the meat into a kettle of hot 
water, letting it remain until cool, sometimes 
repeating the second time before putting into 
the oven to roast. 

To Improve Boiled Cod 

(Mrs. Louise Stewart) 

If cod is boiled in salted water with a slice 
of onion, a stalk of celery, or a sprig of parsley, 

87 



its tastelessness will be replaced with a very 
agreeable flavor. 

Indian Cellar Sandwiches 

(Nora A. Smith) 

1. Tongue or ham minced. 

2. Equal parts of chicken and cold ham finely 
minced. 

3. Thin slices of cucumber dipped in French 
dressing. 

4. Sardines made to a paste with lemon juice. 

5. Minced hard-boiled eggs, 1 sardine to 
every 3, seasoned with lemon juice. 

6. Cold baked beans mashed to a paste and 
seasoned with mustard or chopped celery. 

7. Canned salmon mixed with hard-boiled 
eggs chopped fine. 

8. 5 heaping teaspoons powdered sugar, 2 of 
cocoa, and 2 of boiling water. Stir over the fire 
until smooth. Add a few drops of vanilla and 
cool. 

9. Orange marmalade. 

10. Cottage cheese and jam or marmalade. 

11. Cottage cheese, lettuce leaves, and French 
dressing. 

12. Peppergrass mixed with chopped hard- 
boiled eggs. 

Fried Oysters 

(Mrs. Alice Bickford) 

Beat up an egg and dip the oysters in it, then 
roll some crackers very fine on the cake board. 

88 



Coat the oysters with the crumbs and lay on a 
platter for 2 or 3 hours, then heat the spider 
very hot and fry the oysters in butter until a 
golden brown. 

Picnic Eggs 

(Mrs. Horatio Harmon) 

Boil the eggs about % an hour. Shell them, 
then cut in halves with a sharp knife, and roll 
out yolks, leaving whites to be filled again. 
Mash yolks and season with salt, pepper, mus- 
tard, and vinegar, adding melted butter enough 
to make it right consistency. Fill the whites 
and let them cool. 

Cider Apple Sauce 

(Delia Hill) 

Boil new cider down to one-half. Pare and 
quarter sweet apples enough to fill up the syrup. 
Boil slowly, with frequent stirring, nearly all 
day, keeping closely covered. 

Children's Candy 

(Bertha Peirce) 

1 cup white sugar. 
% cup vinegar. 

2 tablespoons butter. 

Do not stir. Try in water like molasses candy. 



89 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



XIII 
TO A DORCAS DAUGHTER 

(Kate Douglas Wiggin) 

IF any member of the family has a few min- 
utes a day in which to gather a few floweris 
for the snpper table, yon are the one, whether 
you are twenty years old or whether you are 
only ten. If you are still going to school, you 
may be able to get something every afternoon 
on your way home ; for there is scarcely a week, 
from the time when the dandelions blow, to the 
day when the trees are bare and the ground is 
frozen, when you can not find something lovely 
by the wayside, in the fields, or in the woods. 

If you can do ** button-hole stitch,'' you can 
make a colored edge on a circle of linen for a 
small centre-piece. You can make a pretty 
effect also by putting three or four rows of 
feather-stitching inside the edge; or failing 
anything else, you can feather-stitch a few 
ready-made doylies with different colors and 
have one to match any nosegay. 

If you have a family garden, all is easy from 
June to October ; but if you have not, God has 
been just as good to the poor as the rich in the 
matter of flowers, and the busiest country child 
has just as much within her reach as a princess 
with a conservatory. I give you here a few 
suggestions about making a little daily decora- 
tion for the table. There is not a flower you 

91 



do not know, nor one yon have not often 
gathered. You would put them together your- 
self in just the same way, perhaps; but some- 
how, when a thing is printed in black and white 
it looks like a letter written directly to you! 
You stop and think: '' Why did I never do it? 
It is easy ; it is pretty ; mother and father will 
like it.'^ You will stand up on a chair to look 
on the top shelf of the closet and find a glass 
finger bowl, or a wine glass, or a lemonade cup, 
or a spoonholder. You will see what vases there 
are in the house and what mother will allow 
you to use. As the days go on you will search 
for some new growing thing; you will invent 
and combine and scheme to get a novel effect. 
Some one in the family will notice how you 
arrange flowers and leaves and grasses, and 
you will do them more and more beautifully 
as time goes on, using long stems and putting 
them together loosely and naturally, as Mother 
Nature does. 

Then what will have happened? Only this. 
You will have developed a new love of beauty, 
for you will have learned to produce it. You 
will have used the *^ thinking part'' of you; you 
will have devised and combined and invented; 
in a word, you will have become an artist ! 

It is rather a nice thing to be, — a decorator 
of the farmhouse, the church, the village school ! 
Perhaps they will beseech you to do something 
for the Town Hall later on. Who knows? ''Tall 
oaks from little acorns grow. ' ' 

Meantime, as you are passing the parlor door 
92 



where your motlier is talking with a visitor you 
may hear something like this : 

^^ Yes, our Emily has a great knack with 
flowers. She took a bean pot for a vase when 
she put that goldenrod in the fireplace, but after 
all it looks pretty on the brick hearth. . . . 
That bunch of black-eyed Susans on the table 
is in one of my cooking bowls. Emily says this 
room is so gloomy she always wants to light it 
up with yellow, but the sitting-room is full of 
sunshine and she generally gives me something 
green in there. . . . Yes, it's a wonderful com- 
fort, now that I am too lame to get away from 
the house, to have Emily bring all outdoors in 
to me, and she is only fourteen. . . . She has 
so much ingenuity! Last night was her 
father's birthday. We had nothing extra for 
supper, for a long illness in the house uses up 
money faster than anything else and we have 
to be economical. . . . Well, she took an old 
gold-fish globe that the doctor's wife gave her, 
and filled it with sprigs of autumn leaves and 
then she scattered the handsomest ones over 
the cloth and tied a great red bunch on her 
father's chair. As he looked in the dining- 
room door he caught sight of the table and 
guessed it was some kind of an 'occasion.' Then 
he remembered it was his own birthday, gave 
an extra brush to his hair, and put on his second- 
best coat. I wasn't going to be outdone, so I 
put a couple of jjurple asters on my plate of 
baking-powder biscuits and a sprig of green 
on each end of my platter of corned-beef hash. 

93 



. . . John, my oldest boy, is about sixteen, and 
he used to make fun of his sister's way of 
* dressing up victuals, ' — that is what he called 
it; — but he never does it any more; he says 
that we all kind of ' live up to ' Emily's flowers 
now-a-days/' 

When you have heard this, if you are a good 
Dorcas daughter, your heart will be glad. Per- 
haps in order to ^ ' live up to " your own flowers 
you will take extra trouble in sweeping and 
dusting and arranging the furniture to the best 
advantage. Remember, mother carries the 
heaviest burden, day after day and year after 
year. You can lighten it, of course, by industry 
and helpfulness and cheerful companionship, 
but you can do it still further if you can 
aid in creating and maintaining the " Home 
Beautiful.'' 



Twenty Wild Flowek Combinations foe Fakm- 
HOUSE AND Village Dining Tables 

1. A saucer of the very first dandelions, just 
as a spring surprise. 

2. A tall glass of purple ^'flags'' or gentians. 

3. Mayflowers or anemones, or a plate of 
partridge berries and their leaves. 

4. A few apple blossoms from some heavily 
laden tree that bears poor fruit. 

5. Field daisies; sometimes with grasses, 
sometimes with buttercups. 

94 



6. Long-stemmed purple clover in a wine 
glass. 

7. Ferns of any sort. 

8. A bowl of wild roses. 

9. ^* Butter and eggs '^ in a yellow vase. 

10. Vase of pink or white wild spirea. 

11. Wild clematis. Let it droop from the 
vase on to the table. 

12. A low glass dish filled with pond lilies. 

13. A bowl of tiger lilies, day lilies, or red 
lilies. One kind or another is generally to be 
found growing near some deserted house or by 
the roadside. 

14. Goldenrod and Queen Anne's lace (wild 
carrot). 

15. A glass bowl of goldenrod with little 
branches of red choke cherries. 

16. Black-eyed Susans. 

17. A low bowl of scarlet bunch berries. 

18. Pink hardback. 

19. Goldenrod and brown autumn leaves. 

20. Red and yellow autumn leaves. 

21. A branch of bright-cheeked crab apples, 
laid flat in the centre of the table. 

22. Arrangements of flat hemlock or juniper 
branches, sometimes with the addition of little 
pine cones. This is for the holidays. For 
Christmas morning you can have a tiny tree, 12 
or 14 inches high, and decorate it as you please. 

Waknings 
Never use any decoration of plush or silk or 
ribbon on a plainly furnished table. Never 

95 



make your centre bouquet tall enough to con- 
ceal from each other the faces of the persons 
opposite. Never pack flowers tightly in a vase 
nor fill it too full. Never allow a faded flower 
on the table. Do not use one vase nor one kind 
of flowers until the family is tired of the sight 
of them. Variety is the spice of life. 



\ 



96 



FOR WRITTEN RECEIPTS 



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